Review: Pierre delivers star-making turn in action thriller ‘Rebel Ridge’

Good acting, breathtaking action and a compelling narrative makes the movie thrilling to watch.

By Katie Walsh

The Minnesota Star Tribune
September 4, 2024 at 6:08PM
Don Johnson, left, as police chief Sandy Burnne and Aaron Pierre as Terry Richmond in "Rebel Ridge." (Allyson Riggs/Netflix)

In his fifth feature, “Rebel Ridge,” a Rambo-inspired riff on racial profiling and the insidious banality of evil baked into American policing, Jeremy Saulnier demonstrates his incredible mastery of the taut action thriller.

It zeroes in on Terry (Aaron Pierre), a man caught in a crushingly quotidian nightmare that spins out of control when he is pushed to his limit. Terry maintains his cool, until he doesn’t, and it’s a thrill to watch how Saulnier lets this character off his leash.

In this star-making performance, Pierre is terrific as a man with a particular skill set thrumming below his composed, placid surface. With his golden eyes, velvet voice and smooth gait, Pierre is like a puma prowling across the screen, but Terry’s temperament is much more like a rattlesnake, coiled and ready to strike when threatened.

For the plot engine of “Rebel Ridge,” Saulnier takes on a common but often nasty practice in law enforcement: civil asset forfeiture. In the opening sequence, Terry is cycling through the small Southern town of Shelby Springs when a police officer (David Denman) sloppily attempts to pull him over, hits Terry with his squad car, detains him and seizes the stack of cash he has in his backpack “under suspicion” that it’s drug currency.

Terry had been carrying the cash in order to bail out his cousin Mike (C.J. LeBlanc) from jail, hoping to spring him before a transfer to the state penitentiary, where he’d be in dire danger as a former witness in a murder trial. But Terry’s money disappears into a property locker, where it will remain until he can contest the seizure in court, months later.

By simply existing, and refusing to accept that the police department has stolen his money (and in doing so, endangered his family), Terry has kicked a carefully calibrated hornet’s nest, riling up a swarm of good ol’ boy cops (including an always excellent Emory Cohen), who answer to Chief Sandy Burnne (Don Johnson).

But what these cops don’t realize is that Terry is also someone they don’t want to mess with, as they discover too little, too late that he’s not just an ex-Marine, he’s a Marine Corps Martial Arts Program instructor.

There’s a lot of talk of police procedure in the lead-up to the action of “Rebel Ridge,” though Saulnier seeds bursts of violence throughout, as Terry seizes control of the situation, and Saulnier aligns us with his subjective experience. Long, gliding tracking shots with sophisticated camera and character blocking give way to hectic handheld movements as he tussles with his foes.

However, it is this detailed discussion of mundane legal details — and how the police manipulate policy to their own benefit — that is the point of Saulnier’s film, not just the breathtaking action. Hanging over the narrative is a sense of frustrated futility, that this can and will happen again and again.

Another lawsuit, another life lost, another workaround. But for a moment, one man on a bike with a few expertly wielded weapons can wreak holy havoc on these corrupt cops, and damn, does it feel good to watch.

‘Rebel Ridge’

3.5 stars out of 4

No MPA rating, but consider it R for violence and language.

Where: Lands Friday on Netflix.

about the writer

Katie Walsh